Will Tesla Try For Federal Rule Permitting Non-Dealer Stores?

Several thousand Tesla owners have now purchased their cars by ordering and paying for them online after visiting a Tesla Store showroom.

No franchised dealers are involved.

That's a model that Tesla Motors [NSDQ:TSLA] feels is crucial to getting its electric cars into the mainstream.

State and national auto-dealer groups strongly disagree.

Very, very strongly.

Taking it Federal

Now Tesla's ambitious CEO Elon Musk suggests that perhaps the company will attempt to ensure its legal right to sell cars directly at a Federal level.

In an interview last week with trade journal Automotive News, he suggested that two routes might be Congressional legislation or a Federal lawsuit alleging restraint of interstate trade.

He suggested that the company would rather fight "one federal battle" than "20 different state battles."

Musk has been in the forefront of the fight to protect Tesla's store-and-online-ordering model.

Most recently, he testified last week in Texas on a bill that would explicitly permit customers to buy direct from carmakers who sell "only all electric-powered or all battery-powered motor vehicles."

In other words, from Tesla Motors.

State laws protect dealers

Ever since Tesla announced its plans to sell cars directly, with factory-owned Tesla Stores and Tesla Galleries acting only as display showroms, car dealers and their associations have denounced the plan.

They've also sued Tesla for violating franchise laws in several states--Massachusetts, most notably--and gotten laws changed in others to make Tesla's model flatly illegal.

David Westcott, this year's NADA chairman, called Musk's suggestion a "mistake" and vowed that NADA will "vigorously defend the franchise system."

Auto dealers say that Tesla should use existing dealers who are already operating and know their local markets.

Musk counters that those dealers make the bulk of their profits from selling gasoline cars, meaning that they have little or no incentive to support a disruptive product like the all-electric Tesla Model S luxury sport sedan.

Dealers protect buyers

In an interview last year, Tim Jackson, who heads the Colorado Automobile Dealers Association, detailed three reasons that dealers feel Tesla's online ordering and company store model does not protect the company's buyers:

If or when Tesla Motors fails, independent dealers can continue to provide parts and service for the cars;

Opening stores is expensive and time-consuming; Tesla should spend its money and resources more wisely; and

The reputation of all auto dealers will be hurt if Tesla fails and strands its owners.

Tesla, it's safe to say, likely disagrees with Jackson's arguments.

Petition to White House

The idea of helping Tesla Motors to make its non-dealer stores legal seems to have at least some support among the general public, too.

A petition on WhiteHouse.gov urges the Obama Administration to "overturn franchise laws that limit auto manufacturers from selling their vehicles directly to consumers."

Posted on Tuesday, the petition must reach 100,000 signatures by May 16th to be considered by the White House.

Thus far, it has fewer than 2,000--though we suspect that number may rise as Tesla fans and supporters get wind of it.